Cancer fatalities ‘to drop across Europe’

Cancer death rates across Europe will fall this year, experts predicted yesterday.

Lung cancer deaths in women are growing across Europe but rates of the disease proving deadly in Britain are levelling off, the researchers said.

Overall, almost 1.3 million people will die from cancer in 2011.

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The head of policy at Macmillan Cancer Support, Mike Hobday, welcomed the fall in death rates but warned the number of people living with cancer in the UK is increasing by three per cent every year.

“We know that there are currently two million people in the UK living with a cancer diagnosis, if the current rate continues, the number will have doubled to four million people by 2030,” he added.

“Cancer is changing. For many cancer is now a long-term condition and it is important to realise that it is no longer just about people dying quickly of cancer or being cured.”

Figures from the Mario Negri Institute, University of Milan and the University of Lausanne, Switzerland, show an overall fall in cancer death rates of seven per cent in men and six per cent in women when compared with 2007.

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“However, the number of women dying from lung cancer is increasing steadily everywhere apart from in the UK, which has had the highest rates in women for a decade and is now seeing a levelling off,” the Annals of Oncology cancer journal reports.

The overall downward trend in cancer death rates is driven mainly by falls in breast cancer mortality in women, and lung and colorectal cancer in men.